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 Igor Martins . Photo

Igor Martins

Researcher

 Igor Martins . Photo

Raising Capital to Raise Crops : Slave Emancipation and Agricultural Output in the Cape Colony

Author

  • Igor Martins

Summary, in English

Agricultural output fluctuated worldwide after the emancipation of slaves. The usual explanation is that former slaveholders now lacked labor. This is not the full story: slaves were not just laborers but capital investments to support production. Using databases covering more than 40 years from Stellenbosch in the British Cape Colony, this study measures changes in output before and after emancipation to determine the role of slaves as factors of
production. Large shortfalls in compensation paid to slaveholders after the 1833 Abolition Act reveal that slaves were a source of capital that strongly influenced production levels, an important reason for the output variation.

Department/s

  • Department of Economic History

Publishing year

2020-12-06

Language

English

Publication/Series

African Economic History Network Working Paper Series

Issue

57

Document type

Working paper

Topic

  • Economic History

Keywords

  • slave emancipation
  • slave trade
  • agricultural history
  • labor coercion
  • Cape Colony

Status

Published

Project

  • The Cape of the Good Hope Panel: Long-term studies of growth, inequality and labour coercion in the global south